The Tennessee Titans made a lot of progress this offseason, but the right guard spot still stands out as a question mark.
General manager Mike Borgonzi checked off plenty of needs, and the roster looks better now than it did six months ago. Even so, one position never got a clean answer: right guard.
Kevin Zeitler handled the job in 2025 and did it well, but he hasn’t been re-signed and doesn’t seem likely to come back. That leaves Tennessee leaning on Cordell Volson, Jackson Slater or one of the rookies.
That’s where the concern starts. The Titans had a chance to chase some of the top guards who hit free agency, and the biggest contracts at the position went to players the team could have fit under the cap.
Of course, money alone doesn’t seal a deal. The Titans may not have been in on those names, or they may not have viewed them as the right fit.
Still, if Volson, Slater, Carmona or Coogan struggle once 2026 gets rolling, those missed opportunities will look a lot bigger in hindsight.
Volson is the veteran stopgap in the mix. Tennessee signed him to a low-risk, one-year deal after he missed 2025 with a season-ending injury.
Before that, he started regularly for three seasons in Cincinnati. But his 2024 performance wasn’t exactly a selling point.
PFF ranked him 78th among 136 guards, and while he has been stronger as a run blocker than in pass protection, there’s not much comfort in banking on an inconsistent lineman coming off a serious injury.
Slater brings a different kind of intrigue. He has flashed in limited chances and has earned praise from teammates and coaches.
In a small 2025 sample, he posted a 79.2 pass-block grade, a number that would put him near the top of the league if sustained over a full season. That kind of showing gives Tennessee a legitimate reason to believe he can hold up in a bigger role.
The rookies are still more projection than answer. Coogan has spent most of his career at center, and the Titans seem to view him as a possible center of the future. Carmona, meanwhile, has plenty to clean up and doesn’t look ready to start as a rookie.
So where does that leave the battle? Without an obvious front-runner, right guard looks wide open.
Tennessee’s decision not to make a splash in free agency could mean the staff is comfortable giving Slater a real shot. It could also mean the Titans are still watching the market for cuts from other teams, or hoping Zeitler changes his mind and returns.
For now, the spot feels unsettled. The Titans would probably welcome one more year from Zeitler, with the hope that Slater or Carmona can eventually grow into the role.
Over the next month, the competition should sort itself out. Right now, though, it looks like anybody’s job.
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